Wednesday 27 November 2024
Select a region
News

Sala pilot heard "bang" when previously flying "dodgy" plane

Sala pilot heard

Wednesday 21 September 2022

Sala pilot heard "bang" when previously flying "dodgy" plane

Wednesday 21 September 2022


Newly released audio records have revealed the extent of concerns that pilot David Ibbotson had over the safety of the plane carrying footballer Emiliano Sala which crashed near Guernsey two years ago.

Prior to the fateful flight, in January 2019, Mr Ibbotson was recorded telling a friend that the Piper Malibu was "dodgy" and that he had heard a "bang" while flying it across the Channel on his way to France and could feel a "very low mist" inside.

"I'm flying along and then 'boom'. I thought, 'what's wrong?' So I put everything forward and checked my parameters, everything was good and it was still flying, but it got your attention," he said.

The light aircraft left Nantes for Cardiff on January 21.

The plane disappeared off Radar just under an hour after leaving France, and was never seen again.

sala plane

Pictured: The Piper Malibu light aircraft which David Ibbotson and Emiliano Sala lost their lives in.

Guernsey's emergency services, including the island's lifeboat and Channel Islands Air Search, spent a week looking for the plane and the two men before the official search was called off. 

One week later, the plane's fuselage was found on the sea bed between Guernsey and Alderney, after a privately funded search. Mr Sala's body was recovered from the wreckage.

Mr Ibbotson's body has never been found. 

3salaibbotsonplane-min.png

Pictured: The plane's wreckage was found during a privately funded search by David Mearns, a marine expert.

Now, the BBC has released audio of Mr Ibbotson, believed to have been recorded without him being aware, where he said the plane needed its brakes looking at.

The BBC report quotes Mr Ibbotson as saying: "I'm flying along and then 'boom'. I thought, 'what's wrong?' So I put everything forward and checked my parameters, everything was good and it was still flying, but it got your attention."

He added: "That Malibu, occasionally you've got like a mist every so often. You can feel it, very, very low throughout the airframe."

This new information has been released as part of a new BBC podcast series called 'Transfer: The Emiliano Sala Story'.

In the audio, Mr Ibbotson tells his friend that he has been booked to carry a footballer, worth "20 million" from Cardiff to Nantes, and then back again. 

transfer-emilianosala.jpeg

Pictured: The audio was released in the latest episode of 'Transfer: The Emiliano Sala Story'.

Mr Ibbotson can be heard telling his friend that, while, "normally, I'd have my lifejacket in between my seats", "tomorrow I'll be wearing my lifejacket, that's for sure."

Investigations into the accident have revealed that Mr Ibbotson was not licensed to carry passengers, and the man who arranged the flight, David Henderson has been jailed for 18 months for arranging the doomed transfer.

emiliano sala

Pictured: Emiliano Sala played for Nantes, before being bought by Cardiff, which led to the doomed flight during which he died in January 2019.

Mr Sala was playing for Nantes prior to his death, as well as for his national side Argentina. He had been bought by Cardiff for £15m, which was a record signing for the Welsh side. 

Audio of Mr Sala, telling friends via a WhatsApp group, of his concerns with the plane has previously been released.

"Man, I'm scared," he said.

He also commented that the plane "looks like it's falling apart", and "if you don't hear from me in the next hour-and-a-half... I don't know if somebody will look for me, because they won't find me".

READ MORE...

New podcast aims to shed light on Emiliano Sala transfer

Sala "deeply unconscious" before plane plunged into the sea

WATCH: Sala plane 'broke up mid-flight'

Fatal Sala flight organiser imprisoned

Inquest begins into footballer’s death

Emiliano Sala reported missing after light aircraft disappeared near Alderney

Sign up to newsletter

 

Comments

Comments on this story express the views of the commentator only, not Bailiwick Publishing. We are unable to guarantee the accuracy of any of those comments.

You have landed on the Bailiwick Express website, however it appears you are based in . Would you like to stay on the site, or visit the site?